Denver will retain the Molson Coors Brewing co-headquarters, regardless of relocations that may occur from Coors’ pending merger with Miller Brewing, officials of Molson Coors said today.

Molson Coors has a downtown Denver headquarters where the majority of the 100 employees who run the beer holding company work. The firm also has a co-headquarters in Montreal.

Molson Coors and London-based SABMiller agreed last year to merge the U.S. operations of Coors and Miller. The deal is awaiting approval by the U.S. Department of Justice.

Molson Coors chief executive Leo Kiely said no decisions have been made yet about where Coors and Miller will locate key top executives of the joint venture.

Kiely spoke about the merger after today’s annual meeting of Molson Coors. He said Coors and Miller “need to pull a relatively small team of leadership together someplace.”

Yet whether the combined headquarters of Miller and Coors will be located in Miller Brewing’s home of Milwaukee, Coors Brewing’s base in Golden, or a third city, Denver will retain the Molson Coors headquarters, said Molson Coors spokeswoman Kabira Hatland.

“Molson Coors will continue to be headquartered in Denver and Montreal. (There is) no change there,” Hatland said.

Civic leaders and economic-development officials in Colorado and Wisconsin have been lobbying to have the Miller Coors headquarters located in their home states.

However, Molson Coors vice chairman Pete Coors said earlier this year that the headquarters would probably be located in another state.

Kiely said today that “Pete spoke for himself on that” when he made the remarks. “The decision hasn’t been made yet.”

The owners of Boulder’s Sterling University Peaks apartments, who this summer were cited for illegally subdividing 92 bedrooms in the complex, have reached an agreement to settle the case for $410,000, the city announced Thursday.